Italian Chess Player Suspected Of Cheating, Expelled From Tournament

Earlier this week an amateur chess player was banned from the Imperia chess festival after suspicions of cheating, using morse code. This was reported by La Stampa and meanwhile picked up by dozens of media worldwide.

Then, aided by a metal detector, chief arbiter Jean Coqueraut discovered that the player had equipment on him.

Ricciardi reportedly had a pendant hanging around his neck, underneath his shirt, which contained a tiny video camera. He also had wires attached to his body, and a small box hidden under his armpit.

“I kept on looking at him. He was always sitting down, never got up,” the arbiter told La Stampa. “Very strange, we are talking about hours and hours of play. Above all, he always had his arms folded with his thumb under his armpit. He never took it out.

“And he blinked in an unnatural way, as if it was concentrated on the board, but lost in some other thought. Then I realized: he was deciphering the signals in morse code. Point line point line. That was it.”

The arbiter had insisted on checking the player with a metal detector after he had received a complaint letter by four participants. It's not exactly clear how the sophisticated equipment was connected to an outside computer or accomplice.

Ricciardi was removed from the tournament and his games declared lost. However, he denies that he cheated.

“It's only envy,” he told La Stampa in a follow-up article. “I always knew my potential, but I was never able to express it. It's all false. I've played for 30 years, it's a genuine passion. But only now, thanks to yoga and self-training I managed to free my mind from tensions and emotions.”

There are countless examples of cheating in chess, and only this year there were two clear examples that were reported on by international media.

In April, at the Dubai Open GM Gaioz Nigalidze was caught using an electronic device in the toilet. The player, who happened to be the reigning champion of Georgia, was expelled from the tournament.

In the same month an amateur chess player was caught cheating at the Dr. Hedgewar Open in New Delhi. The 1500-player, who beat several much stronger opponents, was caught after round five carrying two mobile phones strapped to his legs.

GM Emil Sutovsky, the President of the Association of Chess Professionals (ACP), on Facebook expressed his worry about this development that affects chess very negatively.

“I keep repeating it — we have to enhance the fight against this plague of the modern chess. Those rare successes, catching several primitive cheaters with their gun smoking shall not mislead us — it is just a tiny pinnacle of the iceberg. It is THE PLAGUE, and it presents a deadly threat to chess.”